👋 Tomorrow’s Tech, Delivered Today

Hi! Welcome to the 15th edition of the TomorrowToday newsletter.

We’re here to decode the AI chaos so you don't have to. Think of us as your friendly neighbourhood tech translators - we cut through the chaos, translate the jargon, and spotlight new AI tools that matter for founders, builders, and curious minds.

Buckle up, because the future's moving fast and we're here to make sure you don't get left behind! ⚡

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~6 mins read

🗞️ News Flash

🧠 Notion 3.0: The AI assistant that actually gets your work done

/Productivity /Agent

Forget everything you thought you knew about productivity apps. Notion just dropped their 3.0 update with AI Agents, and honestly, it might be the closest thing we've seen to having a super-smart intern who never sleeps, never forgets, and actually understands your entire digital life.

These aren't your typical chatbots that just answer questions. Notion Agents can run autonomously for up to 20 minutes, handling hundreds of pages while pulling data from your Gmail, Slack, Google Drive, and code repositories. They remember your preferences, learn your workflows, and can execute complex multi-step tasks without you babysitting them.

The real magic? It's all connected through MCP (Model Context Protocol) servers, meaning your agent has full context about everything - your meeting notes, project timelines, team conversations, the works. Ask it to "create a competitor analysis report using last week's Slack discussions and the research docs in Drive," and it'll actually do it while you grab coffee.

🔗 Check out the release video here.

Real-life use cases:
The Project Manager's Dream: Automatically create status reports by pulling data from multiple sources, updating project timelines, and sending follow-up reminders to team members.

The Content Creator's Assistant: Generate social media content calendars, cross-reference campaign performance data, and create detailed content briefs based on trending topics and past successful posts

Sales Team Superpower: Track lead interactions across email and Slack, automatically update CRM entries, and create personalised outreach sequences based on prospect behaviour patterns

📊 How are YOU actually using ChatGPT and Claude?

/Benchmark /UsageStats

OpenAI and Anthropic just dropped some eye-opening research about how their 700+ million users actually interact with AI, and the results might surprise you. Turns out, we're not all coding geniuses - most people use ChatGPT for practical guidance, writing help, and decision support, with personal use skyrocketing from 53% to 73% over the past year.

Claude users lean heavily into coding tasks, while ChatGPT dominates in writing and everyday problem-solving. The fastest growth? It's happening in low and middle-income countries, proving AI isn't just a Silicon Valley obsession anymore. Perhaps most interesting: only 4.2% of ChatGPT messages are about programming, despite what Twitter might have you believe.

The takeaway? Everyone's finding their own AI workflow, from tutoring kids to planning vacations to making business decisions. The personal productivity boost is real, and it's growing fast.

Everyone uses ChatGPT and Claude differently - what are you finding most valuable? Planning meals, writing emails, debugging code, or something totally unexpected? We'd love to feature user stories in future newsletters! Send us an email and tell us how AI is actually changing your daily routine.

💻 OpenAI courts developers with Codex upgrades

/Coding

OpenAI clearly hasn't given up on winning over developers. Their latest Codex upgrade introduces GPT-5-Codex, a specialised version of GPT-5 that's been trained specifically for real-world software engineering tasks. Think of it as ChatGPT's cousin who went to a coding bootcamp and actually finished.

The improvements are impressive: it can work independently for over 7 hours on complex refactoring tasks, provides more accurate code reviews, and adapts its "thinking time" based on task complexity. For simple requests, it responds quickly. For complex builds, it takes its time and gets it right.

OpenAI is clearly fighting hard to capture developer mindshare in a crowded market where Cursor, GitHub Copilot, and others are all vying for the same territory. The unified experience across CLI, IDE, and web shows they're serious about making Codex a true coding partner, not just a fancy autocomplete.

🔗 Check out the launch documentation here.

Real-life use case: Delegate entire feature builds while you focus on architecture and strategy - like having a junior developer who never needs coffee breaks.

💡 Curiosity Corner

In this section, we aim to spotlight an incredible AI tool or use case and guide you on how you can try it.

This week’s challenge: Build your first automation with Replit Agent 3

Tired of manually doing the same digital tasks over and over? Replit's Agent 3 (currently in beta) is like having a personal automation wizard that speaks plain English. Instead of learning complex workflow tools, you just tell it what you want automated, and it builds it for you.

Agent 3 connects to platforms like Slack, Outlook, Notion, Telegram, and more to create practical automations - think scheduled email digests, Slack notification bots, task sync dashboards, or expense trackers that actually work.

Here's how to try it:

  1. Visit replit.com and create a free account

  2. Click "Create with AI," then select "Agent 3" under Agents & Automations

  3. Choose a trigger: Slack, Telegram, Timed Automation, etc.

  4. Type what you want (e.g., "Send me a weekly Slack digest every Monday with my Notion tasks")

  5. Watch your agent build in real-time; test and deploy when ready

  6. Connect your accounts once you're happy with the automation

Pro tip: Start simple with something like a daily reminder bot, then graduate to more complex workflow automations as you get comfortable!

📜 AI Dictionary

AI is full of jargon, and we’re here to decode it. Each week, we’ll give you a plain-English definition of a buzzy term you’ve probably seen (but never fully understood).

CLI (Command Line Interface) - noun

Your computer's text-based control panel that makes you look like a hacker in movies. Instead of clicking buttons and icons, you type commands directly to tell your computer what to do. Think of it as having a conversation with your machine using specific keywords and phrases. Modern AI coding tools like Codex CLI bring this old-school interface into the future - now you can literally chat with AI through your terminal to build entire applications.

Weird & Wonderful

In this section, we aim to spotlight something weird & wonderful in the world of AI.

This week: Will Meta's Neural Band Glasses be the new way that humans interact with technology?

Remember when BlackBerry users couldn't imagine life without physical keyboards? Meta just dropped their Ray-Ban Display glasses with Neural Band control, and it might be the beginning of the end for touchscreens as we know them.

These aren't just smart glasses - they're controlled by subtle muscle movements detected by a wristband that reads your hand signals. You can literally control them by thinking about moving your fingers, without anyone noticing. The glasses look completely normal (classic Wayfarers, naturally) but pack a colour display, an AI assistant, and six hours of battery life.

The live demo at Meta Connect was... interesting. Zuckerberg's cooking demonstration failed spectacularly when the AI couldn't follow along, and the video call wouldn't trigger properly (watch the video here). Classic tech demo chaos! But here's the thing - even with the stumbles, they actually shipped this science fiction device to market first.

This feels like one of those inflexion points where the old way of doing things suddenly looks ancient. Just like how touchscreens made physical keyboards feel clunky, gesture-controlled wearables might make fumbling with phone screens seem primitive. The future of interfaces isn't just hands-free - it's thought-controlled.

Meta's betting that the next computing revolution won't happen on your desk or in your pocket, but right on your face. Whether they're right or not, we're definitely living in interesting times.

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